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Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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08-30-2009 09:09 PM
This book fascinated me, and I hope it will interest all of you, too. I've sent some messages back and forth with the publisher, so I'm hoping we can get Jane to join us sometime during the month.
Here's the info from the order page:
Synopsis
A wide-ranging and delightful narrative history of the celebrated plant breeder Luther Burbank and the business of farm and garden in early twentieth-century America
A century ago, Luther Burbank was the most famous gardener on the planet. His name was inseparable from a cornucopia of new and improved plants—fruits, nuts, vegetables, and flowers—for both home gardens and commercial farms and orchards. At a time when the science of genetics was in its infancy and agriculture was often a perilous combination of guess work and luck, many people wanted a piece of the man they called the Wizard of Santa Rosa.
As the United States moved from a nation of farms to a nation of city dwellers, the people behind the new products that transformed daily life were admired with a fervor that is not accorded to their present-day counterparts. Everyone knew and marveled at Samuel Morse's telegraph, Alexander Graham Bell's telephone, and Thomas Edison's electric light. And like these other great American inventors, Burbank was revered as an example of the best tradition of American originality, ingenuity, and perseverance. Burbank had learned the secret of teaching nature to perform for man, breeding and crossbreeding ordinary plants from farm and garden until they were tastier, hardier, and more productive than ever before.
The Garden of Invention is neither an encyclopedia nor a biography. Rather, Jane S. Smith, a noted cultural historian, highlights significant moments in Burbank's life (itself a fascinating story) and uses them to explore larger trends that he embodied and, in some cases, shaped. The Garden of Invention revisits the early yearsof bioengineering, when plant inventors were popular heroes and the public clamored for new varieties that would extend seasons, increase yields, look beautiful, or simply be wonderfully different from anything seen before.
The road from the nineteenth-century farm to twenty-first-century agribusiness is full of twists and turns, of course, but a good part of it passed straight through Luther Burbank's garden. The Garden of Invention is a colorful and engrossing examination of the intersection of gardening, science, and business in the years between the Civil War and the Great Depression.
The New York Times - Janet Maslin
…[a] colorful, far-reaching book about the genetic, agricultural, economic and legal issues raised by Burbank's life and legend.
More Reviews and Recommendations
Biography
Jane S. Smith received her Ph.D. in English from Yale University and has taught at Northwestern University on topics ranging from twentieth-century fiction to the history of public health. Her history of the first polio vaccine, Patenting the Sun: Polio and the Salk Vaccine, received the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Science and Technology. She has served as a commentator, consultant, and writer for numerous documentary film projects. She works in a very small room with a very large window.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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08-30-2009 10:49 PM
Here is Jane S. Smith's website link: http://www.thegardenofinvention.com/
Here's her bio, from her website (someone else from Chicago -- woot!):

Biography
A century ago, Luther Burbank was the most famous gardener on the planet. His name was inseparable from a cornucopia of new and improved plants—fruits, nuts, vegetables, and flowers—for both home gardens and commercial farms and orchards. At a time when the science of genetics was in its infancy and agriculture was often a perilous combination of guess work and luck, many people wanted a piece of the man they called the Wizard of Santa Rosa.
As the United States moved from a nation of farms to a nation of city dwellers, the people behind the new products that transformed daily life were admired with a fervor that is not accorded to their present-day counterparts. Everyone knew and marveled at Samuel Morse’s telegraph, Alexander Graham Bell’s telephone, and Thomas Edison’s electric light. And like these other great American inventors, Burbank was revered as an example of the best tradition of American originality, ingenuity, and perseverance. Burbank had learned the secret of teaching nature to perform for man, breeding and crossbreeding ordinary plants from farm and garden until they were tastier, hardier, and more productive than ever before.
The Garden of Invention is neither an encyclopedia nor a biography. Rather, Jane S. Smith, a noted cultural historian, highlights significant moments in Burbank’s life (itself a fascinating story) and uses them to explore larger trends that he embodied and, in some cases, shaped.The Garden of Invention revisits the early years of bioengineering, when plant inventors were popular heroes and the public clamored for new varieties that would extend seasons, increase yields, look beautiful, or simply be wonderfully different from anything seen before.
The road from the nineteenth-century farm to twenty-first-century agribusiness is full of twists and turns, of course, but a good part of it passed straight through Luther Burbank’s garden. The Garden of Invention is a colorful and engrossing examination of the intersection of gardening, science, and business in the years between the Civil War and the Great Depression.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-02-2009 12:12 PM
What do you think about engineered plants? Do you look for heirloom plants or new, improved hybrids?
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-10-2009 11:11 PM
I know some of you are having trouble commenting during the renovations, so I'm just going to keep posting related information. This is a fascinating book about Luther Burbank and, as the subtitle says, "the business of breeding plants."
Here is a website for the Luther Burbank Home and Gardens in Santa Rosa, CA:
http://ci.santa-rosa.ca.us/departments/recreationa

Here is some historical information from the website:

One of Burbank's goals was to manipulate the characteristics of plants and thereby increase the world's food supply. Burbank developed an improved spineless cactus which could provide forage for livestock in desert regions. During his career, Burbank introduced more than 800 new varieties of plants -- including over 200 varieties of fruits, many vegetables, nuts and grains, and hundreds of ornamental flowers.
Burbank was a friend of both Thomas Edison and Henry Ford and both men visited at the Burbank home. It was Burbank's legacy that cast the City of Santa Rosa as the City Designed for Living and inspired the annual Rose Parade which celebrates Burbank's memory and showcases the people and talents of the community.
On Burbank's death in 1926 he was buried near his greenhouse on the grounds of his home. Burbank's home and garden are located in downtown Santa Rosa, and have been certified as Registered National, State, City and Horticultural Historic Landmarks.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-10-2009 11:15 PM - last edited on 09-10-2009 11:15 PM
There is more information about Luther Burbank at the MIT website: http://web.mit.edu/invent/iow/burbank.html


Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-10-2009 11:20 PM - last edited on 09-10-2009 11:31 PM
The article at this link gives a slightly different perspective on Luther Burbank:
http://jhered.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/
And more about Burbank:
http://www.quasar.ualberta.ca/edse456/apt/vignette
http://science.jrank.org/pages/5285/Plant-Breeding
http://inventors.suite101.com/article.cfm/luther_b
http://beth-kephart.blogspot.com/2009/05/garden-of
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-10-2009 11:25 PM
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-10-2009 11:26 PM
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-10-2009 11:32 PM
Here is an excerpt:
From THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
Published by arrangement with The Penguin Press, a member of Penguin Group (USA), Inc.
Copyright (c) Jane S. Smith, 2009.
There are not very many agricultural celebrities. Burbank did not design gardens. He did not advocate for one diet system or another. He cared a great deal about the taste, aroma, and appearance of his creations, but he was no cook and no gourmet, either. Burbank’s talent was much more elemental. He expanded the range of plants that became the meal, the ornamental garden, and the bouquet. And he did this at a time when the vast majority of people agreed that improving on nature was, in fact, a very good thing to do.
It takes a long look back to understand why Luther Burbank was so very famous—or, to put it a slightly different way, to remember why our not-so-distant ancestors were so remarkably eager for plant improvements that they lionized the inventor of a bigger fruit, a better-yielding vegetable, or a longer-blooming flower. The modern supermarket carries a global array of fruits, vegetables, and flowers, obliterating all sense that there might be such things as regional or seasonal differences. Even markets that sell only what is locally grown by independent farmers, without pesticides or genetically modified seeds, have brimming bins stocked with an astonishing profusion of varieties, many of them brought back from the neglected corners of our great-grandparents’ gardens after having been ignored for decades as too small, too fragile, or too expensive for commercial production.
In 1905, markets offered fewer choices. There were a number of types of apples and tomatoes, but many of them didn’t taste very good or travel well. Refrigerated rail cars existed, but refrigerated trucks had not yet been invented to carry produce from the rail depot to the consumer. Two years after the Wright brothers made their historic twelve-second flight, air freight, like commercial air travel, was still very far in the future.
If you wanted to eat something out of season, something you couldn’t store in the root cellar or in an unheated pantry in the back of the kitchen, it would probably have to be canned or pickled or dried. Only a few kinds of produce could survive the trip from distant climates, and those were a luxury item reserved for the very rich. Even exotic delicacies usually came in bottles and tins. Frozen food was another marvel that wouldn’t come on the market for another twenty years. In the ornamental garden, the flowers that bloomed in the spring were gone by June, the rose was an emblem of fleeting pleasure, and hothouse flowers, like hothouse fruits, were a sign of conspicuous wealth.
Today, people debate whether it is miraculous or tragic that breeders can use genetic engineering to make better looking, hardier, more prolific, better selling crops, but nobody disputes the obvious fact that it can be done. When Luther Burbank was born in 1849, plant reproduction was a far greater mystery than the breeding of animals, and the idea of creating new kinds of plants was more common in the realms of fantasy and fiction than of fact. Over the next seventy-five years—after Darwin had popularized the idea of change as a natural process in the organic world, when the new field of genetics was just being discovered, and long before contemporary advances in molecular biology began—plant breeding was a wide-open frontier full of exciting possibilities. During those years, Luther Burbank was one of the people transforming the materials of modern farm and garden.
The story could end there, and Burbank would be remembered as a colorful pioneer of the early days of modern agriculture and horticulture: talented, productive, enormously influential, often over-promoted, and now largely forgotten. What that account would miss, however, is the way this single individual’s almost mythic reputation reflected—and still reflects—a host of contradictory attitudes about the place of human ingenuity in the natural world. Idealist and businessman, Burbank embodied both the passionate closeness to the living garden that many people today are trying to recover and the very beginnings of the large-scale manipulation of plants that has made commercial agriculture so remote from ordinary experience.
He also reminds us of a time when most people regarded “new and improved” as a phrase without irony. Burbank’s story stretched across the continent and extended through much of our national history. His father was born when George Washington was president, while his widow lived into the administration of Jimmy Carter. Still, he was unmistakably a product of his own era, the expansive commercial years between the Civil War and the Great Depression, when a plot of ground could be both a business incubator and, quite literally, a research park.
There were many other people involved in the same enterprise, of course, though few of them ever approached Burbank’s level of fame. Only a small percentage of those contemporaries could be mentioned here without turning this into an encyclopedia of agriculture, which it is not. It’s not a biography, either, if that means a thorough account of all aspects of a person’s life. This began as a book about the origins of modern garden varieties in the days before genetic engineering, and of a single charismatic breeder who was a very celebrated part of that new bounty. It quickly grew into a story about marketing and codifying nature, which led to the much larger consideration of how an earlier generation responded to the unprecedented idea that the vegetable kingdom could be mastered, directed, and even claimed as private property.
In another sense, though, this is a very ancient tale. In these pages, I use the word “garden” in the most inclusive way, to refer to any cultivated space. By business, I mean not just a way of earning a living, but also a vocation, an occupation, and even a preoccupation. Invention is another word of many meanings, encompassing everything from discovery to contrivance to bright idea.
None of these multiple meanings is at all new. As everyone since Adam has discovered, our relationship to growing things is never simple, and the ways we describe that relationship always reveal hopes and assumptions that extend far beyond a mere botanical description. Every garden is a haven but also an arena, a fertile ground for contesting ideas as well as for growing fruits and flowers. Its separation from unmediated nature is what makes it a garden, treasured for what it excludes as well as for what it contains, and the question of who controls the terrain is never very deeply buried. What made the garden of invention so very exciting was the possibility, for a time, that anyone could enter and see what might take root.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-11-2009 12:31 AM
This message has been moved to a more appropriate location. This helps to keep our boards organized.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-13-2009 11:11 AM
I've heard back from Jane S. Smith's publisher, and I'm hoping we can get her to stop by for a visit. And don't forget Amy Stewart is still available to answer your questions and respond to comments this month, too.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-15-2009 10:43 PM
Sometime back, I wrote two articles for two different magazines -- one was about heirloom seeds and the other was about genetically engineered seeds helping feed third world countries. At the time I was interviewing people for the articles, it struck me that they were promoting very different concepts. Later, several people contacted me about the heirloom seed story, decrying all we have lost by "improving" our plants.
The other article inspired strong feelings, pro and con. Some people were thrilled that genetically engineered crops were helping feed starving nations. Others lived in fear of fields of biologically engineered crops accidentally cross-pollinating with their organic crops.
Luther Burbank did a lot of good things, but his career was not without controversy. Any of you feel like discussing this?
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-16-2009 01:33 AM
Though there is the fear of invasive cross pollination. Humanity has always engineered crops, one way or another. Had your broccoli, tomato, ect.. lately. It's just with genetic manipulation the process is dramatically sped up, in too short a time to properly explore ramifications. Anyone else remember the bone head who decided that placing fish genes in tomatoes to lessen the need of pesticides? Dude forgot to check if it would also cause allergic reactions in anyone with fish allergies.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-16-2009 10:28 AM
Good grief! I don't remember hearing about that before.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-16-2009 03:52 PM
Yeah that fiasco started the whole should we label them debate. Responceability of informing the consumer vs. consumer fear towards genetically modified foods. It was back in 2001or 2002 if memory serves.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-16-2009 05:48 PM
Seems like I wrote those articles around 2000 or 2001. Can't remember for sure.
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-17-2009 07:47 AM
It was crucial for the invention of plants, gardens etc. Fifty years ago. Not only for the economy but our future. Unfortunately we have taken this scientific wonder and taken it for granted. All of those wonderful 'garden' inventors have become ghosts the past with research mainly focusing on health issues and finding cures for crazy flu's, heart disease, chicken pox etc. I am not saying these aren't important issues, but if we eat off our land, I believe we will get the nutrients our bodies need to ward off a lot of the health issues we face today-obesity~ the list can go on and on.
I must admit, I am jealous of people who can grow a garden! I started a compost this year and hope to try my head, yet again.
Thanks for the post!
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-17-2009 09:32 AM
Compost heaps are great, and if you decide to start a garden later, the aged compost will be like gold. It really improves the soil! Back to improving plants, I have to say I am mostly in favor of it. I live in the harsh Midwest, and many plants in my garden wouldn't make it through the winter if I planted the species form. Many of the hybrids and cultivars I have were bred and/or selected for their winter hardiness. I also like plants that have been bred for pest and disease resistance, which eliminates the need for the use of pesticides.
Re: Please welcome the author: Jane S. Smith
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09-23-2009 12:24 PM
Re: Featured Book for September: THE GARDEN OF INVENTION by Jane S. Smith
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09-24-2009 12:07 PM
I'm trying to get Jane set up with an Author tag; she'll be joining us soon. Meantime, don't forget Amy is still available to answer your questions, too!
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